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Bookkeeping Basics

How to Do Your Own Bookkeeping: A Simple Monthly Routine for Small Business Owners

EGBy Erick Gamez
·July 18, 2026·9 min read

If the word bookkeeping makes your stomach drop, take a breath. It is not as scary as it sounds, and you do not need an accounting degree to do it well. You need a simple routine, a little time each month, and the willingness to not guess when you are unsure.

This guide gives you the whole thing. By the end you will have a monthly routine you can actually run, whether you own a Gilbert salon, an Apache Junction auto shop, or a Queen Creek online store. Let us start with what bookkeeping even is.

What Bookkeeping Actually Is (in Plain Words)

Bookkeeping means recording every dollar that comes in and every dollar that goes out, and then sorting each one into a category (a simple label like "rent" or "supplies"). That is the whole job. You are building an honest record of what happened in your business.

Why bother? Three groups depend on those records. The IRS wants proof of your income and expenses if they ever ask. Your banker wants clean numbers before they hand you a loan or a line of credit. And you, most of all, need real numbers to make good calls about pricing, hiring, and spending. Guesswork is expensive.

One thing owners often blur together is bookkeeping and taxes. They are not the same. Bookkeeping is the day to day recording that happens all year. Taxes are what you file once a year, using those records as the raw material. Good books make tax time fast and cheap. Messy books make it slow and painful. Do the bookkeeping well and the taxes mostly take care of themselves.

Set Yourself Up Before Month One

A little setup now saves you hours later. Do these three things before you record a single transaction.

Open a dedicated business bank account and card

This is the single most important step. Open a checking account and a debit or credit card used only for the business. When your business money lives in its own account, your data starts clean and every transaction is already a business one. If you mix personal and business spending, you create hours of untangling later. We wrote a whole guide on that in how to separate business and personal finances.

Pick your tool

If you have fewer than about 30 transactions a month, a simple spreadsheet is honestly fine. Once you pass that, or you start invoicing customers and tracking who owes you, move to QuickBooks Online. It connects to your bank, pulls transactions in automatically, and saves real time.

Build a short category list

You do not need 80 categories. You need 10 to 15 that match your business. Here is a starter list for a Gilbert salon: Service Revenue, Retail Product Sales, Rent, Utilities, Product and Supplies, Booth or Chair Costs, Payroll and Contractors, Software and Booking App, Insurance, Bank and Card Fees, Marketing, and Owner Pay. That is enough to see the whole picture without drowning in detail.

Pro tip. Keep your category list on a sticky note next to your computer for the first two months. When you can categorize without looking, you have it memorized, and the monthly routine gets a lot faster.

The 90-Minute Monthly Routine, Step by Step

Block out about 90 minutes on the first week of every month for last month's books. Same day each month, on your calendar, no exceptions. Here is exactly what you do.

Step 1: Gather every transaction

Download your bank and card statements for the month, or let QuickBooks sync them in. You want every checking transaction, every card charge, and any cash you took in. If money moved, it needs to be on the list.

Step 2: Categorize each one

Go line by line and give each transaction one of your categories. Most will be obvious. When you hit one you cannot identify, do not guess. Flag it (mark it "ask me") and keep going. You will chase down those few instead of forcing a wrong label that quietly breaks your numbers.

Step 3: Reconcile

Reconciling means matching your records to the bank statement so that your ending balance equals the bank's ending balance. If the bank says you ended March with $8,420 and your books say the same, you are clean. If they do not match, you either missed a transaction or entered one twice. Find the difference before you move on. This is the step that catches errors, so never skip it.

Step 4: Note what is owed

Write down anything customers still owe you (called accounts receivable) and anything you still owe others (called accounts payable). If your Queen Creek online store shipped an order but the wholesale customer has not paid yet, that is receivable. If you owe a vendor for supplies, that is payable. These are not in your bank balance yet, but they are real, and you want to see them.

Note. If you fall behind and it has been three months, do not panic. Just start with the oldest month and work forward one month at a time. Old books are still worth fixing.

The Three Numbers to Check Every Month

Once the books are clean, you only need three numbers to know how you did: revenue, total expenses, and profit. Revenue is all the money you brought in. Total expenses is everything you spent to run the business. Profit is what is left when you subtract expenses from revenue.

Here is a worked example for a Gilbert salon doing $18,000 in a month. Revenue is $18,000. Say total expenses (rent, product, payroll, software, fees, marketing) come to $15,300. Profit is $18,000 minus $15,300, which is $2,700. That profit is 15 percent of revenue, which is healthy for a salon.

Then compare each number to last month and ask why it moved. Did revenue drop because you took a week off, or because bookings are softening? Did product costs jump because of a one time restock, or because you are overbuying? The number is only useful when you ask the why behind it.

Watch out. A simple rule of thumb: if your profit is under 10 percent of revenue for two months in a row, something needs attention. It could be pricing, a creeping expense, or too much owner pay. Do not wait for the year to end to notice.

If pricing turns out to be the culprit, our guide on how to price a job so you actually make money walks through the math.

The Five Mistakes That Wreck DIY Books

Most DIY bookkeeping does not fail because the math is hard. It fails because of a few habits. Avoid these five and you are ahead of most owners.

  1. Letting months pile up. Wait until March to do January and you will not remember what that $240 charge was. The receipts and the memory are both gone. Do it monthly and it stays easy.
  2. Counting loan money or owner deposits as income. If you put $5,000 of your own cash into the business, or the bank funds a loan, that is not revenue. Counting it as income inflates your numbers and can inflate your tax bill.
  3. Paying personal costs from the business account. Grabbing groceries on the business card muddies your books and weakens the legal separation between you and the business. Keep them apart.
  4. Never reconciling. Skip the bank match and small errors compound silently for months until your numbers are fiction. Reconcile every single month.
  5. Guessing on categories. One wrong label is a small thing. A hundred of them is a P&L (profit and loss report) you cannot trust. Flag what you do not know instead of guessing.

When It Makes Sense to Hand This Off

Here is the honest truth. Everything above is real, and a motivated owner can absolutely do it. But doing it right every single month takes time, discipline, and a bit of know how that grows with your business. The routine that takes 90 minutes when your books are clean can balloon into a weekend when a month gets messy or a category question stumps you.

So do the math on your own hours. If your salon chair or your service calls earn you $120 an hour, and books plus fixing your mistakes eat six hours a month, you are spending a good chunk of real income on work you do not enjoy and were never trained for. Many owners would rather put those hours back into the business and the customers.

That is exactly what we do at GGS. We handle your monthly bookkeeping, keep your categories clean, reconcile every account, and hand you the three numbers that matter with a plain explanation of what moved and why. We are QuickBooks Online experts, and yes, we run the event accounting behind the WM Phoenix Open, so clean books under pressure is our normal. When you have a question, you text a person, not a ticket. You can see how the done for you bookkeeping works, and if you are local, our Mesa page has more on how we serve East Valley owners.

Not sure if you need help yet? Start by reading what a fractional CFO actually does, or just book a call and we will give you an honest answer.

Key Takeaways

The short version

  • Bookkeeping is just recording money in and out and sorting it into categories, and it is the raw material your taxes, your banker, and your own decisions all depend on.
  • Set up for success first: open a dedicated business bank account and card, pick a spreadsheet or QuickBooks Online, and build a short list of 10 to 15 categories that fit your business.
  • Run the same 90-minute routine every month: gather transactions, categorize (flag anything you cannot identify), reconcile to the bank, and note what is owed to you and by you.
  • Check three numbers monthly, revenue, expenses, and profit, and if profit falls under 10 percent of revenue for two months in a row, dig into why.
  • The biggest DIY killers are letting months pile up, counting loans or owner deposits as income, mixing personal spending in, and never reconciling.

Questions owners ask us

How long should bookkeeping actually take each month?
Once your books are clean and your bank is connected, about 90 minutes for a small service business. The catch is that it only stays quick if you do it every month. Let three months pile up and that same work can turn into a full weekend, because the receipts and the memory of what each charge was are both gone.
Do I really need QuickBooks Online, or is a spreadsheet enough?
A spreadsheet is genuinely fine if you have fewer than about 30 transactions a month and you are not invoicing customers. Once you pass that, or you need to track who owes you money, QuickBooks Online saves real time by pulling transactions in from your bank automatically and doing the math for you.
What is the difference between bookkeeping and taxes?
Bookkeeping is the ongoing recording of money in and out that happens all year. Taxes are what you file once a year, using those records as the source. Clean bookkeeping makes tax time fast and inexpensive. Messy books make it slow and stressful, so the two are connected but they are not the same job.
I am several months behind. Where do I start?
Start with the oldest unfinished month and work forward one month at a time. Do not try to do everything at once. Old books are still worth fixing, and if the backlog feels overwhelming, a one-time cleanup can get you current so your monthly routine actually stays manageable.
Done For You

Rather run your business than reconcile it?

GGS handles your monthly bookkeeping and hands you the numbers that matter in plain English, and you text a real person, not a ticket. Book a free intro call.

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